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| List Of AWA World Tag Team Champions |
List of AWA World Tag Team ChampionsThis is the title history of the AWA World Tag Team Championship
See also
- American Wrestling Association
Category:American Wrestling Association championships
Category:Lists of sportspeople
AWA World Tag Team ChampionshipThe AWA World Tag Team Championship was the tag team title for the American Wrestling Association from 1960 until the promotion folded in 1991. It was revived (not as a world title) by AWA Superstars in 1996.
It was one of the coveted tag team titles in the United States from the beginning until the late 1980's, when the AWA's talent roster was depleted by the World Wrestling Federation and Jim Crockett Promotions. Pro Wrestling Illustrated awarded this title with World Title Status during its existence.
Trivia
- The first champions were Murder Inc.
- The last champions were The Trooper & D.J. Peterson.
- The Crusher & Dick the Bruiser held the titles the most times, five.
See also
- American Wrestling Association
- List of AWA World Tag Team Champions
Category:American Wrestling Association championships
American Wrestling Association
American Wrestling Association was a professional wrestling organization, based in Minneapolis, Minnesota. The AWA operated mainly in the midwestern United States and central Canada. Wrestling bouts were promoted in Minneapolis, St. Paul, Bloomington (Minnesota), Winnipeg, Chicago, Omaha, Milwaukee, Denver, Las Vegas, and San Francisco. From 1957 to 1991 it was owned by Verne Gagne.
History
Until the 1980s, the AWA was considered one of the top wrestling companies in the world. Verne Gagne had been its biggest star even before he took control of the company, and his position at the top only solidified with him as owner. Feuding against Gene Kiniski, Dr. Bill Miller, Fritz Von Erich, Dr. X (Dick Beyer under a mask), The Crusher, Ray Stevens and Nick Bockwinkel, he won the AWA World Heavyweight Championship 10 times before retiring from in-ring competition in 1981. Gagne was a former amateur-wrestling champion who had earned a spot on the U.S. team at the 1948 Summer Olympics, and he ran the AWA with a traditionalist sensibility, firmly believing that good wrestling, not flashy entertainment, should be the basis of a pro-wrestling company. When his career wound down, he turned the company's focus to Bockwinkel, also a skilled mat technician.
But as Vince McMahon and the northeastern-based World Wrestling Federation attempted to end pro wrestling's regional era and establish the WWF as the dominant national promotion, Gagne made several decisions that caused the AWA to lose momentum in the emerging wrestling war. Among them was overemphasizing his son Greg in AWA storylines, but his biggest misstep was his failure to make Hulk Hogan the focus of his company. Starting in 1982, Hogan rapidly caught on as a babyface with AWA fans, but even as his popularity grew to unprecedented levels, Gagne refused to give him the AWA championship. He recognized Hogan's showmanship and charisma but believed a wrestling company should be built around the best wrestler in the company, such as himself and Bockwinkel. Gagne did not respect Hogan as a pure wrestler, and in an interview years later, rated his wrestling ability as "a one or a zero" on a scale of one to 10. On two occasions, the AWA went so far as to tease title wins for Hogan only to strip him of the championship.
Frustrated, Hogan accepted McMahon's offer to go to the WWF. Within months, he had become the focus of the company and its dominant world champion. He and the WWF soon became mainstream media phenomena and virtually synonymous with professional wrestling in much of the country, leaving the AWA a second-tier promotion. As the situation worsened, much of the AWA's other top talent, including announcer "Mean" Gene Okerlund, manager Bobby "The Brain" Heenan, and wrestlers Curt Hennig, Rick Martel and Shawn Michaels, also left for the WWF.
The AWA was influential in Pro Wrestling USA, an attempt to co-promote with the NWA and establish a national presence to compete against the WWF, in 1985. Abroad it had working agreements with Japan-based promotions International Pro-Wrestling (1969 to 1980), then All Japan Pro Wrestling (1980 to 1988), and, near its end, New Japan Pro Wrestling.
Currently, all copyrights and footage for the AWA are owned by the former WWF, now known as World Wrestling Entertainment.
AWA Superstars of Wrestling
See also: AWA territories
The AWA was restarted in 1996 under the ownership of Dale Gagner as an independent promotion called AWA Superstars of Wrestling. Gagner claims to have purchased the rights to the AWA name from Verne Gagne. On April 4, 2005, the owners changed its history books and named Hulk Hogan a two time AWA World Heavyweight Champion. Also in 2005, Gagner began to franchise the AWA name, selling memberships to existing independent promotions around the United States, Canada, and Japan. Several members of the new AWA are former members of the National Wrestling Alliance, including the [http://www.cwfwrestling.com Canadian Wrestling Federation], which is operated by the last NWA President, Ernie Todd. Todd resigned the NWA presidency in August 2005 amid claims of racism (later retracted), and almost immediately joined the AWA.
AWA Super Cards & PPV's
- PPV: SuperClash III
- Super Card: AWA's SuperSunday, SuperClash, WrestleRock '86, Rage in a Cage, Battle by the Bay, Brawl in St Paul, SuperClash 2, Rage in a Cage 2, War in the Windy City, World Tag Team Tournament, SuperClash 4, Twin Wars 90
AWA Team Challenge Series
The AWA held a "Team Challenge Series" from October 1 1989 through August 11 1990. All of the wrestlers were divided into three teams, which were headed by an AWA star. They were "Larry's Legends", headed by Larry Zbyszko, "Slaughter's Snipers", headed by Sgt. Slaughter, and "Baron's Blitzers", headed by Baron Von Raschke. Numerous well-known wrestlers, including Big Van Vader and "Cowboy" Bob Orton, Jr. were drafted to participate in the TCS, but never took part in any of the matches.
Many of the matches that made up the TCS were unconventional. Greco Roman Rules, Mixed Tag Team, Tag Team Elimination, even a match where the participants (Mike Enos and the Trooper Del Wilkes) wore football helmets and pads, to name a few. The most famous match of the series was a match between Jake Milliman and Col. DeBeers. Instead of a standard wrestling match, it was a "Great American Turkey Hunt" match where the one who got a stuffed, uncooked turkey off of the top of a pole first would be declared the winner. Millman took the turkey from DeBeers when the referee's back was turned and was declared the winner. The match took place in a TV studio without an audience (the announcers claimed it was in an effort to stop wrestlers interfering, but it was actually due to poor ticket sales).
The final match in the TSC was a royal rumble style battle royal featuring Brad Rheingans, The Destruction Crew, Col. DeBeers Ed Wiskoski, the Texas Hangmen, the Trooper Del Wilkes, and others. Jake Milliman again came away with the win by eliminating DeBeers at the end, winning the Series and supposed $1,000,000 check for Larry's Legends.
The final points tally was as follows: Larry's Legends (56), Baron's Blitzers (51), Slaughter's Snipers/DeBeers' Diamondcutters (48). Sgt. Slaughter left the AWA and headed to the WWE before the TCS ended and Col. DeBeers became the new team captain. The TCS concept was not a success and many fans feel that it hastened the AWA's demise.
AWA Wrestlers
- Adrian Adonis
- Badd Company (Paul Diamond & Pat Tanaka)
- Crusher Jerry Blackwell
- Nick Bockwinkel
- Bruiser Brody
- Jim Brunzell
- The Crusher
- Paul E. Dangerously
- Col. DeBeers
- The Destruction Crew (Mike Enos & Wayne Bloom)
- Candy Divine
- Bill Dundee
- Fabulous Freebirds (Michael Hayes, Terry Gordy & Buddy Roberts)
- Manny Fernandez
- Greg Gagne
- Verne Gagne
- Jimmy Garvin
- Ron Garvin
- Chavo Guerrero
- Hector Guerrero
- Mando Guerrero
- Scott Hall
- Stan Hansen
- Curt Hennig
- Hulk Hogan
- Don Leo Jonathan
- Sheik Adnan El Kassey
- "Mr. Magnificent" Kevin Kelly
- Teijho Khan
- Jerry Lawler
- The Long Riders (Bill & Scott Irwin)
- Rick Martel
- Sherri Martel
- Wahoo McDaniel
- Madusa Miceli
- Midnight Rockers (Shawn Michaels & Marty Jannetty)
- Nord the Barbarian
- Original Midnight Express (Dennis Condrey & Randy Rose)
- Diamond Dallas Page (as a manager)
- Ken Patera
- D.J. Peterson
- "Mr. Electricity" Steve Regal
- Brad Rheingans
- Johnny Rich
- Tommy Rich
- Wendi Richter
- Road Warriors (Animal & Hawk)
- Buddy Rose
- Sgt. Slaughter
- Doug Somers
- Jonnie Stewart
- The Trooper (aka The Patriot)
- Soldat Ustinov
- Jesse Ventura
- Baron Von Raschke
- Leon White
- Larry Zbyszko
- Boris Zhukov
- Buck "Rock N Roll" Zumhofe
The following wrestlers were active in the AWA in the 1970s, especially in the Chicago area. These wrestlers often performed at the International Amphitheater in Chicago.
- Bobby Heenan
- Dick the Bruiser
- Reggie Lisowski (The Crusher)
- Rock Rogowski (Ole Anderson)
- Moose Cholak
- Sailor Art Thomas
- Bobo Brazil
- Bob Luce (Chicago promoter)
- Sam Menaker
- Scrap Iron George Gedasky
- Prince Pullins
- Paul Christy
- Spike Huber
- Angelo Poffo
- Johnny Kace
- Ernie Ladd
- Gene Okerlund (interviewer)
AWA Titles
- AWA World Heavyweight Championship
- AWA World Tag Team Championship
- AWA Women's Championship
- AWA World Light Heavyweight Championship
- AWA International Heavyweight Championship
- AWA International Television Championship
- AWA United States Heavyweight Championship
- AWA America's Heavyweight Championship
- AWA Omaha Heavyweight Championship
- AWA Midwest Heavyweight Championship
- AWA Midwest Tag Team Championship
- AWA Southern Heavyweight Championship
- AWA Southern Tag Team Championship
- AWA Brass Knuckles Championship
External links
- [http://www.awastars.com/ AWA Superstars website]
- [http://www.awausa.com/ AWA affiliates website]
- [http://www.wrestling-titles.com/awa/ AWA Titles list] at wrestling-titles.com
Category:Minnesota sports
Category:American Wrestling Association
Category:Lists of sportspeopleThese are lists of people of a particular sport.
See list of sportspeople for an overview and :Category:Sportspeople for specific categories.
Category:Lists of people by occupation
Category:Sportspeople
Category:Sports-related lists
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